World War II as Disaster · 4/23/2006 · the Second World War. Out of the ashes it left in its...
Transcript of World War II as Disaster · 4/23/2006 · the Second World War. Out of the ashes it left in its...
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DRAFT – Not to be circulated or quoted without permission
Last revised April 23, 2006
The Second World War as an Economic Disaster
Niall Ferguson
Laurence A. Tisch Professor of History
Harvard University
mailto:[email protected]
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The Second World War as an Economic Disaster ∗
Niall Ferguson
I
On April 20, 1949, the New York Times carried three items about Japan. The most
arresting headline was: ‘Japan’s War Cost Is Put at $31 Billion; 2,252,000 Buildings
Razed, 1,850,000 Dead.’ Similar figures were produced in the post-war period for nearly
all the combatant countries. In four countries – China, Germany, Poland and the Soviet
Union – the death toll was even higher, or five if the mortality of the 1943 Bengal famine
is attributed to the war. Altogether, the best available estimates suggest, somewhere in the
region of 60 million people lost their lives as a result of the Second World War. In some
countries the mortality rate was higher than one in ten. In Poland it approached one in
five.1 No other previous war had been so catastrophic in relative, much less in absolute,
terms. Nor was Japan unique in the scale of destruction its capital stock had suffered.
Although the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki represented the logical culmination of
Anglo-American strategy – two entire cities laid waste by just two atomic bombs –
comparable devastation had already been wreaked in other cities by conventional
weaponry. In the aggregate, according to the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, 40 percent
of the built-up areas of 66 Japanese cities had been destroyed; nearly a third of urban
population had lost their homes. In Germany a similar proportion of the housing in 49
cities had been destroyed or seriously damaged. Of course, although they lacked the
Allies’ bombing capability, the Germans and Japanese had meted out their share of
destruction before suffering this explosive ‘payback’. Around 30 per cent of Polish
buildings had been destroyed, and comparable proportions of the country’s agricultural
property, mines and industry. More than a fifth of Yugoslavian housing had been
wrecked. The story was much the same in Ukraine and Byelorussia, which had borne
∗ This paper draws heavily on my forthcoming book, The War of the World: History’s Age of Hatred, to be published by Penguin in 2006. Full acknowledgements for assistance will be provided in the book. 1 The total death toll is based on the figures in Overy, Times Atlas of the Twentieth Century, pp. 102–5; Harrison, ‘Overview’, pp. 3f., 7f.. On the Soviet figures, see Harrison, ‘Soviet Union’, p. 291; Overy, Russia’s War, pp. xvi, 287; Erickson, ‘Red Army Battlefield Performance’, pp. 235f. For German mortality, see Overmans, Deutsche militärische Verluste. For China, see Ho, Studies on the Population of China, pp. 250−3.
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brunt of the Nazi occupation. Eastern China was in a state of unquantifiable chaos thanks
in large measure to the depredations of Japanese rule. Nor had Western Europe escaped
unscathed. In Great Britain about 30 per cent of the homes were destroyed or damaged; in
France, Belgium, and The Netherlands about 20 per cent. The exactions of German
occupation had reduced gross domestic product in France and the Netherlands to below
60 per cent of the 1938 level; Italy had fared little better. According to the Encyclopedia
Britannica, the cost of the war ‘to governments’ – meaning, presumably, its aggregate
fiscal costs – amounted to $1 trillion. Given the unquantifiable human suffering that lies
behind all such statistics, it seems almost bathetic to call the Second World War an
economic disaster. It was, quite simply, the greatest man-made disaster of any kind in
modern history.
Yet the two other items about Japan in that same day’s paper told a contrasting
story: one of rapid economic recovery. Not only were Japanese farmers achieving a
record post-war harvest. More significantly, the Times published a remarkable
photograph under the headline: ‘Japanese Items Ready for Export’. The caption below
the picture read: ‘Samples of paper umbrellas, table tennis balls, textiles and fish nets
which will be flown to the United States to encourage American firms to place orders
with Japanese manufacturers.’2 This was just the beginning of an explosive growth of
Japanese exports, the composition of which would soon change from such low-value
products to sophisticated industrial manufactures. Herein lay one of the great ironies of
the Second World War. Out of the ashes it left in its wake grew, phoenix-like, the
economies of the defeated powers.
Any interpretation of the Second World War as an economic disaster has to take
account of both sides of this strange coin. On one side, the quintessence of disaster: six
years of systematic destruction of people and capital. On the obverse, the prelude to
economic miracles unprecedented in human history.
Economic historians have done less than might have been expected to resolve this
seeming paradox. For example, the two pre-eminent English-language journals of
economic history have published surprisingly little on the subject of the Second World
War since 1949. There have been seventeen articles about the war in the Journal of
2 New York Times, April 20, 1949.
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Economic History and just four articles in the Economic History Review. By comparison,
the JEcH published no fewer than thirty articles about the Great Depression in the same
period. Yet the Depression, though it left millions idle, killed few people. Though it
certainly emptied many buildings and left them to decay, it destroyed no cities. It is not as
if the war had nothing to do with economics. Those who began it, both in Europe and in
Asia, explicitly averred their economic motivations. Behind the rhetoric about ‘living
space’ and ‘Asian co-prosperity’ were cold calculations about Germany’s and Japan’s
need to acquire by force strategic raw materials which they could not acquire by trade. At
the same time, economics played a central role in the debates about how far to ‘appease’
rather than confront the dictators. And, needless to say, once the war began it was
economics as much as grand strategy that decided its outcome. The economic spin-offs of
the war are also well known, not least in accelerating technological innovations that lay
the foundations of post-war growth.
There are, it is true, distinguished exceptions to the rule of relative neglect.
Building on their earlier researches on the Nazi economy, Alan Milward3 and Richard
Overy4 have both addressed the central economic questions about the war’s origins and
course. Mark Harrison, too, has done much to illuminate the economic foundations of the
Soviet war effort.5 Thanks to Hugh Rockoff and others, we now know much more than
we did about the workings of American war economy.6 J. R. Vernon demonstrated more
than a decade ago that ‘half or more’ of the U.S. recovery from the Depression occurred
in 1941 and 1942, and that most of the increase in real GNP in those years was
attributable to the war-induced fiscal stimulus.7 More recently, Robert Higgs has cast
doubt on the enduring economic value, in terms of capital formation, of wartime
government investment.8 There is also an important literature on the institutional
consequences of the war, which allowed ‘fresh starts’ for Germany and Japan, but
reinforced institutional deficiencies in Britain.9 Yet it was striking that, when a group of
historians recently co-authored a new economic history of the war, their contributions 3 Milward, War, Economy and Society. 4 Overy, Why the Allies Won. 5 See e.g. Harrison, ‘Soviet Union’. 6 See for an overview Rockoff, ‘United States’. 7 Vernon, ‘World War II Fiscal Policies’. 8 Higgs, ‘Wartime Socialization’. 9 Olson, Rise and Decline; Barnett, Audit of War.
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were quite different in terms of approach and methodology, making any kind of
comparative reading distinctly difficult.10 The most alluring avenue of inquiry at present
is to use financial market data to draw inferences about contemporary investors’ views of
the war. Here, more or less standard methods of identifying structural breaks in bond
price series are used to illuminate the attitudes of investors in various markets, notably
Zurich, Stockholm, Paris and London.11 It is nevertheless symptomatic that these papers
essentially concern themselves with the reactions of financial markets to war, treating
military and political events, once again, as exogenous shocks which investors could
anticipate and discount, or be (pleasantly or unpleasantly) surprised by.
In this paper I will argue that the economics of the Second World War can be
understood under four headings: the economic motivations of its instigators; the
economic arguments that prevented their being deterred from going to war; the economic
reasons for their ultimate but very costly and hard-fought defeat; and the economic
consequences of the Allied victory. I hope to show that the war was an economic disaster
in more than one sense; not only in terms of the death and destruction that it caused, but
also because from an economic point of view it was unnecessary. Conquest was not the
solution to the economic problems of Germany, Japan and Italy that the leaders of those
countries claimed it would be. Equally spurious were the economic arguments that led the
Western powers to appease rather to deter Germany and Japan. Because both sides erred,
a war ended up being fought that the Axis powers stood no realistic chance of winning,
but which the Allied powers nevertheless found extremely expensive to win. Post-war
economic growth, which saw the vanquished transformed into victors, in large measure
vindicated Winston Churchill’s famous assertion that the Second World War ought to be
known as ‘the unnecessary war’.
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The Depression caused radical changes in economic policy in most countries, but radical
changes in political and legal arrangements in only some countries and the adoption of
expansionist foreign policies in fewer still. Most countries in fact responded to the crisis
10 Harrison (ed.), Economics of World War II. 11 Frey and Kucher, ‘History as Reflected in Capital Markets’ and ‘Wars and Markets’; Brown and Burdekin, ‘German Debt’; Oosterlinck, ‘Bond Market’; Waldenström and Frey, ‘Government Bond Prices’.
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as Britain and the United States did; by seeking as far as possible to avoid external
conflicts. This was as much out of parsimony as altruism; the assumption was that the
cost of fighting unemployment at home ruled out further expenditures on small wars
abroad. Even the majority of authoritarian regimes were quite content to persecute
internal enemies and bicker with their neighbors over borders. Only three countries
aspired to territorial expansion and war as a means to achieve it. They were Japan, Italy
and Germany. Their dreams of empire were the proximate cause of the multiple conflicts
we know as the Second World War.
Why did only these three authoritarian regimes adopt and act upon aggressive
foreign policies aimed at the acquisition of empires? A conventional answer might be that
they were in thrall to anachronistic notions of imperial glory. Yet there was nothing
anachronistic about the idea of empire in the 1930s. In a world without free trade,
empires offered all kinds of advantages to those who had them. It was undoubtedly
beneficial to the United Kingdom to be at the centre of a vast sterling bloc with a
common currency and common tariff. And what would Stalin’s Soviet Union have been
if it had been confined within the historic frontiers of Muscovy, without the vast
territories and resources of the Caucasus, Siberia and Central Asia? The importance of
empire became especially obvious to the self-styled ‘have not’ powers when they adopted
rearmament as a tool of economic recovery. For rearmament in the 1930s – if one wished
to possess the most up-to-date weaponry – demanded copious supplies of a variety of
crucial raw materials. Neither Italy, Germany not Japan had these commodities within
their own borders other than in trivial quantities. By contrast, the lion’s share of the
world’s accessible supplies lay within the borders of one of four rival powers: the British
Empire, the French Empire, the Soviet Union and the United States. Thus, no country
could aspire to military parity with these powers without substantial imports of
commodities whose supply they all but monopolized. For three reasons, it was not
possible for the ‘have nots’ to rely on free trade to acquire them. First, free trade had been
significantly reduced by the mid-1930s, thanks to the imposition of protectionist tariffs.
Second, Italy, Germany and Japan lacked adequate international reserves to pay for the
imports they required. Third, even if their central banks’ reserves had been overflowing
with gold, there was a risk that imports might be interdicted by rival powers before
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rearmament was complete. There was therefore an attractive logic to territorial
expansion.
The concept of Lebensraum had been originated in the late 1890s by Friedrich
Ratzel, Professor of Geography at Leipzig, and developed by the Orientalist and
geopolitical theorist Karl Haushofer, whose pupil Rudolf Hess may have introduced the
term to Hitler in the early 1920s. We can now see that the argument was based on an
excessively pessimistic view of economic development. Since 1945 gains in both
agricultural and industrial productivity have allowed ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’ alike to
sustain even larger populations than they had in 1939. By the end of the twentieth
century, Italy’s population density was 17 per cent higher than sixty years before,
Britain’s 28 per cent higher, France’s 42 per cent higher, Germany’s 64 per cent higher
and Japan’s 84 per cent higher. As a result of decolonization, all these countries had been
‘have nots’ (in the interwar sense) for most of the intervening years, yet their economies
had grown significantly faster than in the periods when some or all of them had been
‘haves’. Clearly, ‘living space’ was not as indispensable for prosperity as Haushofer and
his disciples believed. Yet in the inter-war context the argument had a powerful appeal –
and particularly in Germany, Italy and Japan. In the late 1930s, as figure 1 shows,
Germany had the fourth-highest population density of the world’s major economies (363
inhabitants per square mile), after the United Kingdom (487), Japan (469) and Italy (418).
Under the Treaty of Versailles, however, Germany had been deprived of her relatively
few colonies, whereas Britain had added to her already vast imperium, as had France. If,
as Hitler had learned from Haushofer, ‘living space’ was essential for a densely populated
country with limited domestic sources of food and raw materials, then Germany, Japan
and Italy all needed it. Another way of looking at the problem was to relate available
arable land to the population employed in agriculture. By this measure, Canada was ten
times better endowed than Germany and the United States six times better. Even
Germany’s European neighbors had more ‘farming space’: the average Danish farmer
had 229 per cent more land than the average German; the average British farmer 182 per
cent more and the average French farmer 34 per cent more. To be sure, farmers in
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Poland, Italy, Romania and Bulgaria were worse off; but further east, in the Soviet Union,
there was 50 per cent more arable land per agricultural worker.12
Figure 1
Population per square mile, 1938
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500
United Kingdom
Japan
Italy
Germany
Czechoslovakia
Japanese colonies
Poland
Austria
France
China
UK colonies
United States
Soviet Union
French colonies
UK dominions
Italian colonies
Source: Statesman's Yearbook, 1938.
Living space had a secondary meeting, however, which was less frequently
articulated but in practice much more important. This was the need that any serious
military power had for access to strategic raw materials. Here changes in military
technology had radically altered the global balance of power – arguably even more so
than post-1918 border changes. Military power was no longer a matter of ‘blood and
iron’, or even coal and iron, as it had been in Bismarck’s day. Just as important were oil
and rubber. The production of these commodities was dominated by the United States,
the British Empire and the Soviet Union or countries under their direct or indirect
influence. American oilfields alone accounted for just under 70 per cent of global crude
petroleum production; the world’s next largest producer was Venezuela (12 per cent).
12 Tooze, Wages of Destruction, table 4.
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The Middle Eastern oilfields did not yet occupy the dominant position they enjoy today:
between them, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the smaller gulf states accounted for less than
7 per cent of total world production in 1940. The critical point was that oil production in
all these countries was in the hands of British or American firms, principally Anglo-
Persian, Royal Dutch/Shell and the successors to Standard Oil.13 Nor was modern
warfare solely a matter of internal combustion engines and the rubber tires. Modern
planes, tanks and ships – to say nothing of guns, shells, bullets and the machinery needed
to make all these things – required a host of sophisticated forms of steel, which could be
manufactured only with the admixture of more or less rare metals like antimony,
chromium, cobalt, manganese, mercury, molybdenum, nickel, titanium, tungsten and
vanadium. Here too the situation of the Western powers and the Soviet Union was
dominant, if not monopolistic. Taken together, the British Empire, the French Empire, the
United States and the Soviet Union accounted for virtually all the world’s output of
cobalt, manganese, molybdenum, nickel and vanadium, around three-quarters of all
chromium and titanium, and half of all tungsten. The former German colony of South-
West Africa, now securely in British hands, was practically the only source of vanadium.
The Soviet Union, followed distantly by India, accounted for nearly all manganese
production. Nickel was virtually a Canadian monopoly; molybdenum an American one.14
The case that Germany, Italy and Japan lacked ‘living space’ was therefore far
from weak. Germany had abundant domestic supplies of coal and the biggest iron and
steel industry in Europe, but before the 1930s needed to import all its rubber and oil.15
Rearmament necessarily increased Germany’s appetite for both these commodities; at the
same time, however, diverting resources into armaments reduced the amount that
Germany could export – and, in the absence of ample hard currency reserves and foreign
credit lines, it was only through exporting that Germany could earn the money to pay for
imports. There was thus a clear and recurrent conflict between Hitler’s military ambitions
and the economic resources at his disposal. There had already been one foreign exchange
crisis in 1934, which had forced a sharp reduction in imports. Hitler’s Four Year Plan
memorandum of August−September 1936 was intended to overcome this constraint on 13 See Yergin, The Prize. 14 Economist, October 1, 1938, pp. 25ff. 15 Tooze, Wages of Destruction, appendix 2.
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his military ambitions. As Hitler made clear, his priority remained the confrontation and
defeat of ‘Bolshevism’, meaning Soviet Communism. The paramount objective of the
German government must therefore be ‘developing the German Army, within the shortest
period, to be the first army in the world in respect to training, mobilization of units [and]
equipment’. Yet Hitler proceeded to enumerate the difficulties of achieving this within
Germany’s existing borders. First, an ‘overpopulated’ Germany could not feed itself
because ‘the yield of our agricultural production can no longer be substantially
increased’. Secondly, it was ‘impossible for us to produce artificially certain raw
materials which we do not have in Germany, or to find other substitutes for them’. Hence,
Hitler reasoned, ‘the final solution’ could be found only ‘in an extension of our living
space, and/or the sources of the raw materials and food supplies of our nation.’ Yet
Germany was not yet in a military position to win ‘living space’ through conquest.
Rearmament would therefore only be possible through a combination of increased
production of domestically available materials (e.g. low-grade German iron ore), further
restriction of non-essential imports (e.g. coffee and tea) and substitution of essential
imports with synthetic alternatives (e.g. ersatz fuel, rubber and fats). The core of the Four
Year Plan was therefore a huge investment in new technologies capable of producing
synthetic raw materials using domestically available commodities such as coal, as well as
the creation at Salzgitter of a vast new state-owned factory designed to manufacture steel
from low-quality German iron ore.
Hitler’s memorandum should be understood primarily as a repudiation of the
earlier ‘New Plan’ favored by the Reichsbank President and Economics Minister Hjalmar
Schacht, which had aimed at replenishing Germany’s depleted hard currency reserves
through a complex system of export subsidies, import restrictions and bilateral trade
agreements. Hitler dismissed brusquely Schacht’s arguments for a slower pace of
rearmament and a strategy of stockpiling raw materials and hard currency. The
memorandum was also an explicit threat to German industry that state control would be
stepped up if the private sector failed to meet the targets set by the government. However,
the most important point in the entire report was the timetable for war that it established.
Hitler’s two conclusions could not have been more explicit:
I. The German armed forces must be ready for combat within four years.
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II. The German economy must be fit for war within four years.16
By decisively sanctioning an acceleration in the pace of rearmament and overriding
Schacht’s warnings of another balance of payments crisis, Hitler’s Four Year Plan
memorandum significantly increased the likelihood that Germany would be at war by
1940. In the words of Major General Friedrich Fromm of the Army’s Central
Administrative Office: ‘Shortly after completion of the rearmament phase, the
Wehrmacht must be employed, otherwise there must be a reduction in demands or in the
level of war readiness’.17 Indeed, the Four Year Plan made it quite likely that war would
come even sooner than that. By the time Hitler addressed his senior military leaders on
November 5, 1937 – a meeting famously summarized by Colonel Friedrich Hossbach – it
had become apparent that the enormously expensive mobilization of internal resources
envisaged in the Four Year Plan could not possibly deliver the level of rearmament the
service chiefs regarded as necessary until, at the earliest, 1943. It was for this reason that
Hitler turned his attention to the possibility that ‘living space’ – and the resources that
came with it – might be acquired sooner rather than later, beginning with Austria and
Czechoslovakia. From early 1938 onwards Hitler embarked on a policy of territorial
expansion and accelerated rearmament which made war in Europe increasingly probable.
Such was the circular quality of the ideology of Lebensraum: a country needed a large
and well-equipped military in order to acquire additional space; but such a military could
be acquired only by conquering additional space.
The Japanese need for ‘living space’ seemed even more acute. The collapse of
global trade after 1928 had dealt Japan’s economy a severe blow – a blow only made
more painful by the ill-timed decision to return to the gold standard in 1929 (the very
moment it would have made sense to float the yen) and Finance Minister Inoue
Junnosuke’s tight budgets. The terms of trade turned dramatically against Japan as export
prices collapsed relative to import prices. In volume terms, exports fell by 6 per cent
between 1929 and 1931. At the same time, Japan’s deficits in raw materials soared to
record heights (see figure 2). Unemployment rose to around one million. Agricultural
incomes slumped.
16 Treue, ‘Hitlers Denkschrift’. 17 Tooze, Wages of Destruction, ch. 7.
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Figure 2
Japan's raw materials deficit, 1897--1936 (thousands of yen)
-450,000
-400,000
-350,000
-300,000
-250,000
-200,000
-150,000
-100,000
-50,000
-1897-1906 1907-1916 1917-1926 1927-1936
All mineralsAgricultural food commodities
Source: Yasuba, ' Shortage of Natural Resources', table 3.
There were, it is true, alternatives to territorial expansion as a response to this
crisis. As Finance Minister from December 1931, Takahashi Korekiyo cut Japan’s
economy loose from the deadweight of orthodox economics, floating the yen, boosting
government spending and monetizing debt by selling bonds to the Bank of Japan. These
proto-Keynesian policies worked as well as any tried elsewhere during the Depression.
Between 1929 and 1940 gross national product rose at a real rate of 4.7 per cent per
annum, significantly faster than the Western economies in the same period. Export
volumes doubled. In theory, Japan might have carried on in this vein, reining in the
budget deficit as the recovery gathered pace, exploiting her comparative advantage as a
textile manufacturer at the heart of an Asian trading bloc. As a percentage of total world
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trade, intra-Asian trade doubled between 1913 and 1938.18 By 1936 Japan accounted for
16 per cent of total Chinese imports, a share second only to that of the United States.19
Yet the proponents of military expansion forcefully argued against the option of
peaceful commercial recovery. Japan’s principal export markets were neighbouring Asian
countries; could those markets be relied upon to remain open in an increasingly
protectionist world? There was, in any case, good reason to suspect the Western powers
of preparing to abandon the so-called ‘unequal treaties’ with China in response to
Chinese nationalist pressure. In 1929 the British had restored tariff autonomy to China
and ended their embargo on arms shipments. The following year, they restored the North
China naval base of Weihaiwei to Chinese control. This boded ill for Japan, which saw
the subjugation of China as indispensable to her trade policy. At the same time, Japan
was heavily reliant on imports of Western machinery and raw materials.20 In 1935 she
depended on the British Empire for half her imports of jute, lead, tin, zinc, and
manganese, nearly half her imports of rubber, aluminium, iron ore and cotton, and one-
third of her imports of pig iron.21 Around a third of Japan’s imports came from the
United States, including copious quantities of cotton, scrap iron and oil.22 Around 80 per
cent of Japanese oil was imported from the United States in the 1930s and 10 per cent
from the Dutch East Indies; the nearest other source was on the Soviet-controlled island
of Sakhalin.23 Her dependence on American heavy machinery and machine tools was
greater still. Japan also needed the English-speaking economies as markets for her
exports, around a fifth of which went to British imperial markets. In the words of Freda
Utley, the left-wing English journalist and author of Japan’s Feet of Clay (1936), a
liberal Japan seemed doomed to ‘oscillate between the Scylla of dependence on the USA
and the Charybdis of dependence on British empire markets’.24
Territorial expansion was the alternative to such insecurity. In the short term, the
militarists reasoned, the increased military expenditure caused by a shift to formal
imperialism would stimulate Japan’s domestic economy, filling the order books of 18 Sugihara, ‘Economic Motivations’, p. 260. 19 Endicott, Diplomacy and Enterprise, p. 186. 20 Boyd, ‘Japanese Military Effectiveness’, p. 143. 21 Neidpath, Singapore Naval Base, p. 136. 22 Jansen, Japan and China, p. 397. 23 Coox, ‘Effectiveness of the Japanese Military Establishment’, p. 19. 24 Sugihara, ‘Economic Motivations’, p. 267. See also ibid., tables 2, 3.
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companies like Mitsubishi, Kawasaki and Nissan, while in the long term, it was argued,
the appropriation of resource-rich territory would ease the country’s balance of payments
problems – for what use is an empire if it does not guarantee cut-price raw materials? At
the same time, Japan would acquire desperately needed ‘living space’ to which her
surplus population could emigrate. In the words of Lieutenant General Ishiwara Kanji,
one of the most influential proponents – and practitioners – of a policy of territorial
expansion:
Our nation seems to be at a deadlock, and there appears to be no solution for the
important problems of population and food. The only way out … is in the
development of Manchuria and Mongolia. … [The] natural resources will be
sufficient to save [Japan] from the imminent crisis and pave the way for a big
jump.25
In one respect this argument was not wholly spurious. That Japan faced a Malthusian
crisis seemed all too clear when famine struck some rural areas in 1934. Imperialism
addressed this problem. Between 1935 and 1940 around 310,000 Japanese emigrated,
mostly to the growing Japanese empire in Asia; this certainly eased the downward
pressure on domestic wages and consumption.26 In another respect, however, the case for
expansion was deeply suspect. Quite simply, expansion exacerbated precisely the
structural problems it was supposed to solve, by requiring increased imports of
petroleum, copper, coal, machinery and iron ore to feed the nascent Japanese military-
industrial complex.27 As the Japanese Marxist Nawa Toichi put it, ‘the more Japan
attempted to expand the productive capacity of her heavy and military-related industries
as a preparation for her expansion policy … the greater her dependence on the world
market and the imports of raw materials’ became.28 These arguments applied with equal
force to Italy, which manifestly lacked the domestic economic resources to conduct more
than small-scale wars against technologically inferior foes.29
III 25 Yasuba, ‘Shortage of Natural Resources’, p. 553n. Cf. Hata, ‘Continental Expansion’, p. 292. 26 Yasuba, ‘Shortage of Natural Resources’, p. 555 and table 5. 27 Ibid., p. 555. 28 Sugihara, ‘Economic Motivations’, p. 275. 29 Zamagni, ‘Italy’.
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The Second World War was an economic disaster partly because it was, from a strictly
economic point of view, avoidable. The ambitions of what became the Axis powers to
rearm and acquire living space by conquest could have been resisted far more effectively
than they were had the Western powers, Britain, France and the United States, adopted
strategies aimed at deterring rather than appeasing the ‘have nots’. This is not the place to
discuss the military, diplomatic and domestic political arguments for and against
appeasement. But it is germane to consider the economic arguments since these played an
arguably decisive role, particularly in the British case.
The main argument advanced against more rapid rearmament in 1930s Britain
was economic. All that accelerated arms spending would achieve, it was objected by the
mandarins of the Treasury, would be to undermine Britain’s precarious economic
recovery. Better to proceed at a moderate pace and to play for time. The key question is
whether this argument was correct.
Fighting the First World War had, to be sure, increased the British National Debt
by a factor of twelve. By 1927 it was equivalent to a crushing 172 per cent of gross
domestic product. The interest on the debt accounted for more than two fifths of public
expenditure in the late 1920s.30 Budget surpluses and an overvalued exchange rate –
following Churchill’s decision, as Chancellor of the Exchequer, to return to the gold
standard in 1925 – were attained at the expense of jobs in manufacturing. The staple
British industries of the late Victorian era – coal, iron, ship-building and textiles – had
now been replicated all over the world; export markets for such British products
inexorably shrank. ‘Invisible’ earnings from Britain’s still immense overseas
investments, financial services and shipping were also under pressure.31 Less obvious but
in some ways more profound was the damage that the war had done to the labour force.
Under the system of volunteering that had been used to recruit the new divisions needed
in the first half of the war, a great many skilled workers had been drawn into the armed
forces, of which a substantial proportion were either killed or incapacitated.32 The official
solution to post-war problems was essentially Victorian in conception: budgets should be 30 Figures for the national debt kindly supplied by Professor Charles Goodhart. Figures for gross domestic product are taken from Feinstein, National Income, Statistical Tables, table 3. Debt service is from Flora et al., State, Economy and Society, pp. 4448f. 31 Kennedy, Realities behind Diplomacy, pp. 226−30. 32 Greasley and Oxley, ‘Discontinuities in Competitiveness’.
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balanced, the pound should return to gold and free trade should be restored. In the name
of ‘retrenchment’, defense expenditure was reined in, so that as a share of total public
spending it fell from nearly 30 per cent in 1913 to just over 10 per cent twenty years
later.33 The Ten-Year Rule amounted to a spending freeze for the armed services. Even
when it was dropped in 1932, the Treasury insisted that ‘financial and economic risks’
militated against significant increases in the defense budget.34
As Chancellor of the Exchequer, Neville Chamberlain was one of the driving
forces behind the creation of the Defence Requirements Committee (DRC), in the belief
that a clear ordering of military priorities would make his life easier at the Treasury. He
welcomed the identification of Germany as the biggest potential danger.35 Yet it was also
Chamberlain who ruled out as ‘impossible’ the additional £97 million that would be
needed to create and maintain an adequate expeditionary force for use on the continent.
His preference for a deterrent strategy based on bombers was motivated in large measure
by the fact that it looked cheaper than the alternative.36 When the DRC proposed in
November 1935 that its ‘Ideal Scheme’ of rearmament be financed by a Defence Loan,
there was consternation in the Treasury; again Chamberlain insisted on cutting the
spending bids for the navy and the army.37 Soon the Royal Air Force, too, started to look
too expensive. As one Treasury official put it after Munich, ‘We think that we shall
probably not be able to afford it [the Air Ministry’s latest proposals] without bringing
down the general economy of this country and thus presenting Hitler with precisely that
kind of peaceful victory which would be most gratifying to him.’38 The Treasury gave
even shorter shrift to the requests of the Army and Navy for additional funds.39 As for
Churchill’s demands for much larger defense expenditures, which he first advanced in
1936, Chamberlain dismissed these out of hand. Only in 1937 was new borrowing
undertaken to finance rearmament, to the tune of £400 million, and even then
33 Kennedy, Realities behind Diplomacy, pp. 239f. 34 Howard, Continental Commitment, p. 98. 35 Dilks, ‘“Unnecessary War”’, pp. 109–12. 36 Howard, Continental Commitment, pp. 108f. 37 Newton, Profits of Peace, pp. 67f. 38 Kennedy, ‘Tradition of British Appeasement’, p. 233. See in general Peden, British Rearmament and the Treasury. 39 Shay, British Rearmament, pp. 282f.
15
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Chamberlain had initially tried to cover the increased costs by raising taxes.40 His
successor at the Treasury, Sir John Simon, insisted that total defense spending from April
1937 to April 1942 should be capped at £1,500 million.41
In any case, it was hoped that a policy of economic engagement with Germany
might serve to divert the Nazi regime from aggression. On the one hand, officials at the
Bank of England and the Treasury, supported by influential firms in the City of London,
wanted to preserve trade with Germany and avoid a total German default on money owed
to Britain. On the other, they deprecated the kind of economic controls that would
undoubtedly be required if large-scale rearmament was to be undertaken without
domestic inflation and a widening current account deficit.42 Traditional financial strength
was supposed to be the ‘fourth arm’ of British defense, in Inskip’s phrase; hence the
Treasury’s perennial preoccupation with the balance of payments and the exchange rate.
The great fear was that in the event of a prolonged war Britain’s credit abroad would
prove far weaker than between 1914 and 1918, for the current account deficits of the later
1930s were eating away at Britain’s net creditor position, her gold reserves and the
strength of sterling.43 For all these reasons it was not until 1938 that defense expenditure
exceeded 4 per cent of gross domestic product and not until 1939 that the same could be
said of the government’s deficit (see figure 3).
Figure 3
40 Coghlan, ‘Armaments, Economic Policy and Appeasement’, p. 213; Newton ‘“Anglo-German” Connection’, p. 304; Thomas, ‘Rearmament’, p. 560. See also Dilks, ‘“Unnecessary War”’, p. 117. 41 Parker, ‘Treasury, Trade Unions and Skilled Labour’, p. 312. 42 See in general Newton, Profits of Peace and Wendt, Economic Appeasement; Shay, British Rearmament. 43 Peden, ‘Question of Timing’. Cf. Parker, ‘Economics, Rearmament, and Foreign Policy’, pp. 637ff.
16
-
UK defence expenditure and government deficit as percentage of GDP, 1933--1939
-1%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
7%
1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
Total expenditure on rearmament as % GDP
Government deficit as % GDP
Source: Thomas, 'Rearmament', table 1; Feinstein, National Income , Statistical Tables, table 3; Bank of England.
The economic arguments for appeasement reflected British economic strength as
much as weakness. Compared with what had happened in Germany and the United
States, the Depression in the United Kingdom had been mild. Once Britain had gone off
gold in September 1931 and interest rates had been cut to 2 per cent by the Bank of
England, recovery came quite swiftly – not, certainly, to the old industrial regions of the
North, but to the Midlands and the South-East, where new industries and services were
springing up. Cheap money also fuelled a construction boom in England south of the
Trent. But for precisely these reasons, it was argued, significantly higher expenditure on
rearmament would have created problems of over-heating in the British economy, in the
absence of matching tax increases or cuts in other government programs.44 Keynes
himself was to argue in How to Pay for the War that, in the event of large-scale defence
expenditures, inflation and balance of payments problems could be avoided only if the
economy were much more strictly controlled than it had been in the First World War,
with severe taxation of consumption.45 Such an illiberal regime was inconceivable in
44 Coghlan, ‘Armaments, Economic Policy and Appeasement’, pp. 205–9. 45 Keynes, How to Pay for the War.
17
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peacetime. In April 1939 Keynes spelt out the constraints on pre-war rearmament: ‘The
first is the shortage of labour; the second is the shortage of foreign resources.’46 For once
he was articulating the conventional wisdom.
Yet these concerns were surely exaggerated. With the annual rate of growth in
consumer prices peaking at just under 7 per cent in September 1937 and then rapidly
declining (see figure 4), and with long-term interest rates below 4 per cent until the
outbreak of war itself, the Treasury had far more room for manoeuvre than it admitted.
With so much slack in the system – with good reason, contemporaries feared a recession
in 1937 – higher levels of borrowing would not have ‘crowded out’ of private sector
investment. On the contrary, they would probably have stimulated growth.47 As for
skilled labour, that was only an issue because, for originally economic reasons,
Chamberlain had committed Britain to a sophisticated airborne deterrent that turned out
not to worry Hitler; and because the government was almost superstitiously nervous of
antagonizing the bloody-minded leadership of the Amalgamated Engineering Union by
‘diluting’ the skilled labour force.48 In practice, the rearmament program stimulated
staple industries as well as the infant aeronautical engineering sector; even on limited
budgets the navy needed ships and the army needed guns, tanks and uniforms, so the iron,
coal and textile sectors all benefited from rearmament. Wages for skilled labourers did
not jump upwards, as the Treasury pessimists had feared; on the contrary, wage
differentials narrowed.49 A more rational policy, both economically and strategically,
would have been to build more ships and more tanks and to conscript the unemployed –
who still accounted for 14 per cent of insured workers as late as January 1939 – and
prepare a British Expeditionary Force the Germans could not have ignored. Chamberlain
was simply wrong to fear that Britain lacked the manpower ‘to man the enlarged Navy,
the new Air Force, and a million-man Army’.50
Figure 4
46 Parker, ‘Treasury, Trade Unions and Skilled Labour’, p. 317. 47 Thomas, ‘Rearmament’, p. 571. 48 Parker, ‘Treasury, Trade Unions and Skilled Labour’, pp. 328−43. 49 Thomas, ‘Rearmament’, pp. 564f., 567, 570. 50 Howard, Continental Commitment, p. 135; Dunbabin, ‘British Rearmament’, p. 598.
18
-
UK unemployment and inflation, 1928--1939
-10
-5
0
5
10
15
20
25
Jan-28 Jan-30 Jan-32 Jan-34 Jan-36 Jan-38
Insured workers unemployed (percent)UK CPI annual rate
Source: National Bureau of Economic Research; Global Financial Data.
Finally, fretting about Britain’s financial ‘fourth arm’ of defence presupposed that
foreign powers would lend to Britain in a war only if it were financially attractive to do
so, whereas both the United States and the Dominions would have powerful strategic and
economic incentives to lend to Britain if the alternative was a victory for the dictators and
an interruption to Atlantic export shipments. In any case, the current account deficits of
the later 1930s were trivial – equivalent to around 1 per cent of GDP a year, compared
with net overseas earnings of at least 3.5 per cent on a total stock of overseas assets worth
£3.7 billion ($17 billion).51 Britain was not broke in 1938. The crucial point was that by
1939 she might well be if her hard currency reserves continued to diminish. The fatal
error was the assumption − first enunciated by the Permanent Under-Secretary at the
Foreign Office, Sir Robert Vansittart − that Britain gained by waiting.52 As he observed
in December 1936, ‘Time is the very material commodity which the Foreign Office is
expected to provide in the same way as other departments provide other war material. …
To the Foreign Office falls therefore the task of holding the situation until at least
51 Calculated from Mitchell, Abstract of British Historical Statistics, pp. 333f. 52 Parker, Chamberlain and Appeasement, p. 68; Schmidt, ‘Domestic Background’, pp. 103–8.
19
-
1939.’53 In reality, the ‘policy of cunction’ gave Hitler just as much time to build up his
military forces and was positively disadvantageous to Britain from an economic point of
view, since with each passing month of political uncertainty British hard currency
reserves were further depleted.
British decision-makers failed to appreciate how much weaker Germany’s
position was than their own in the decisive summer of 1938, when Hitler might very well
have been confronted and humiliated if not actually defeated over Czechoslovakia. It was
not just in military, diplomatic and political terms that Germany was vulnerable in
1938.54 Of equal importance was her acute economic vulnerability. The Four Year Plan
could not possibly have improved the German position much by September 1938, barely
two years since Hitler’s memorandum had been drafted. Domestic iron ore production
had certainly been boosted, but the increment since 1936 was just over a million tons,
little more than a tenth of imports in 1938. No more than 11,000 tons of synthetic rubber
had been produced, around 12 per cent of imports.55 The rationale of annexing Austria
and Czechoslovakia was precisely to address the shortages of raw materials that were
continuing to hamper German rearmament.56 Had war come in 1938, the journalist Ian
Colvin had it on good authority that Germany had only sufficient stocks of gasoline for
three months.57 In addition, the German economy was by now suffering from acute labor
shortages, not least as a result of the upsurge in arms spending that had been set in train
by the Four Year Plan.58 As Colvin’s testimony suggests, Germany’s economic problems
were no secret. Indeed, their financial symptoms were highly visible. Schacht’s
resignation as Economics Minister – which he submitted in August 1937, though it was
not accepted until November − was widely seen as a blow to the regime’s fiscal
credibility, although he stayed on as Reichsbank President.59 Aside from his objections to
the Four Year Plan, Schacht had two concerns: the mounting inflationary pressure as
more and more of the costs of rearmament were met by printing money, and the looming
exhaustion of Germany’s hard currency reserves. These problems did not go away. 53 Dunbabin, ‘British Rearmament’, p. 597. 54 For the non-economic aspects of the problem, see Ferguson, War of the World, chs. 9 and 10. 55 Tooze, Wages of Destruction, table 6. 56 Overy, ‘Germany and the Munich Crisis’, pp. 194–200. 57 Colvin, Vansittart in Office, p. 273. 58 Tooze, Wages of Destruction, ch. 8. 59 Smelser, ‘Nazi Dynamics’, pp. 38f. Cf. Brown and Burdekin, ‘German Debt’, p. 665.
20
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German exports were a fifth lower in 1938 than the year before. In July Germany had to
give in when Britain insisted on a revision of the Anglo-German Payments Agreement
and continued payment of interest due on the Dawes and Young bonds (issued to help
finance reparations).60 The anti-appeasing commercial attaché in the British embassy in
Berlin had a point when he argued for canceling the Anglo-German Payments
Agreement. By further reducing Germany’s access to hard currency, that would have
struck at the German economy’s Achilles heel.61 Small wonder the German stock market
slumped by 13 per cent between April and August 1938; the German Finance Minister
Count Schwerin von Krosigk warned that Germany was on the brink of an inflationary
crisis. In a devastating Reichsbank memorandum, dated October 3, 1938, Schacht said
the same. When Schacht and his colleagues repeated their warnings of inflation Hitler
fired them.62
As we have seen, British officials worried a great deal about Britain’s shortages of
labour and hard currency. But in both respects the German position was far worse in
1938, just as it was worse militarily, diplomatically and domestically. Had Chamberlain
resisted the temptation to fly off to Germany in pursuit of ‘peace in our time’, but had
instead held firm to the maintenance of Czechoslovakia’s territorial integrity, the pressure
on Germany would have far exceeded that on Britain. Even after Hitler’s bad faith
became apparent, he and key officials in the Treasury and the Foreign Office clung to the
notion that time was on Britain’s side and that it was better to fight later than sooner. But
this was wrong. Time – not to mention the free gift of Czechoslovakia − enabled Hitler to
improve Germany’s strategic position, particularly by concluding the Nazi-Soviet Pact. In
terms of military and economic preparedness, it was the Germans not the British who
gained the most from the last twelve months of peace. In economic terms Munich was a
disaster, for the simple reason that a relatively small war over Czechoslovakia would
have been so much less costly than the war that began with the partition of Poland in
1939.
IV 60 MacDonald, ‘Economic Appeasement and the German “Moderates”’, pp. 115ff. 61 Ibid., p. 121. 62 Tooze, Wages of Destruction, ch. 9.
21
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Appeasement meant that Germany was undeterred by subsequent British commitments to
other Central and East European countries. ‘Our enemies are little worms,’ he remarked,
two days before the Nazi-Soviet Pact was signed; ‘I saw them at Munich.’63 Slow
rearmament also meant that Germany was undeterred by the diminutive forces Britain
had at her disposal to send to Europe even as later as 1940.
The Japanese case was different. Here, it is true, the British offered even less
reason for concern than they did in Europe. It was not difficult for Japanese decision-
makers to work out that the British Empire in Asia was as enfeebled by 1941 as the
Dutch and French. Even had the Europeans adopted more confrontational policies, they
would have lacked credibility given the magnitude of the setbacks they had suffered in
Europe in 1940. The sole obstacle to Japanese hegemony in South-East Asia was
therefore America.64 On the one hand, it was clear that the United States had scant
appetite for war, in Asia or anywhere else. On the other, Americans had little desire to
see Japan as sole master of China, let alone the whole of East Asia. But those who ran
U.S. policy in the Pacific believed they did not need to take up arms to prevent this
because of Japan’s dependence on trade with the United States and hence its vulnerability
to economic pressure.65 Even if the Americans did not intervene militarily, they had the
option to choke the Japanese war machine to death, especially if they cut off oil exports
to Japan.66 This was precisely what made it so hard for American diplomats and
politicians to foresee the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. As normally risk-averse
people, they could not imagine the Japanese being so rash as to gamble on a very swift
victory when the economic odds were stacked so heavily against them.67 They assumed
that the partial sanctions imposed after the Japanese invasion of Indo-China would send a
clear enough signal to deter the Japanese. Their effect was precisely the opposite.
The origins of the war in the Pacific were in large measure economic. The
Japanese-American Commercial Treaty of 1911 was abrogated in July 1939. By the end
of the year Japan (along with other combatants) was affected by the Roosevelt’s ‘moral
embargo’ on the export of ‘materials essential to airplane manufacture’, which meant in 63 Overy, ‘Germany and the Munich Crisis’, p.191 64 See Kinhide, ‘Structure of Japanese-American Relations’. 65 Barnhart, Japan Prepares for Total War, pp178f. 66 Scalapino, ‘Southern Advance’, p. 117. 67 Graebner, ‘Introduction’, pp. xvi–xvii.
22
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practice aluminum, molybdenum, nickel, tungsten and vanadium.68 At the same time, the
State Department applied pressure on American firms to stop exporting technology to
Japan that would facilitate the production of aviation fuel.69 With the National Defense
Act of July 1940 the President was empowered to impose real prohibitions on the exports
of strategic commodities and manufactures. By the end of the month, after a protracted
wrangle between the State Department and the Treasury, it was agreed to ban the export
of high-grade scrap iron and steel, aviation fuel, lubricating oil and the fuel blending
agent tetraethyl lead. On September 26 the ban was extended to all scrap; two months
later the export of iron and steel themselves became subject to license.70 No one knew for
sure what the effect of these restrictions would be. Some, like the State Department’s
‘Advisor on Far Eastern Affairs’ Stanley Hornbeck, said they would hobble the Japanese
military; others, like the U.S. Ambassador in Tokyo, Joseph Grew, that they would
provoke it. Neither view was correct. The sanctions had in fact been imposed too late to
deter Japan from contemplating war, since the Japanese had been importing and
stockpiling American raw materials since the outbreak of war in China.71 Only one
economic sanction was regarded in Tokyo as a casus belli and that was an embargo on
oil. That came in July 1941, along with a freeze on all Japanese assets in the United
States – a response to the Japanese occupation of southern Indo-China.72 From this point,
war in the Pacific was inevitable.
For a long time the Japanese Foreign Ministry had found it hard to imagine the
United States taking up arms against a victorious combination of Germany, Italy and
Japan – especially if the Soviet Union were on friendly terms with that combination.73 A
guiding assumption was that the American public was staunchly isolationist, and that the
victories of Japan and her allies would reinforce rather than reverse that sentiment.74 The
army was also reluctant to confront the United States, hoping that the conquest of
European possessions in Asia could somehow be achieved without precipitating
68 Barnhart, Japan Prepares for Total War, pp. 179f. 69 Ibid., pp. 180f. Cf. Lu, From the Marco Polo Bridge, p. 150. 70 Barnhart, Japan Prepares for Total War, pp. 182–97.Cf. Lu, From the Marco Polo Bridge, p. 144; Coox, ‘Pacific War’, p. 326. 71 Lu, From the Marco Polo Bridge, pp. 244f. 72 Barnhart, Japan Prepares for Total War, pp. 263ff. 73 Lu, From the Marco Polo Bridge, pp. 109–13. 74 Barnhart, ‘Japanese Intelligence’, pp. 440, 446f.
23
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American intervention.75 Until September 1941 Japan’s naval strategists were the only
ones prepared to contemplate a war with America. However, they ultimately could see no
other way of winning it than to deal a knockout blow to the U.S. Navy at the outset.76 By
April 1941 Admiral Yamamoto Isoroku had convinced himself that the ships stationed at
Pearl Harbor could be sunk in one fell swoop. On November 1 Lieutenant-General
Suzuki Teiichi assured the participants at a ministerial-military Liaison Conference that
supplies from the territories to be occupied would be sufficient to meet Japan’s material
needs. ‘In 1943,’ he declared, ‘the material situation will be much better if we go to
war.’77
This was not in fact the same as saying that Japan’s material situation was equal
to the challenge of war against the British Empire, the Dutch East Indies and the United
States.78 All Suzuki meant was that Japan’s material situation was bound to deteriorate
the longer war was postponed. The navy alone was consuming 400 tons of oil an hour,
just idly waiting; after eighteen months it would all be gone.79 It therefore followed that it
was better to strike now rather than to wait. This rationale was sufficient to commit Japan
to such a war if no diplomatic breakthrough had been achieved by midnight on November
30, 1941.
It is sometimes suggested that the decision-makers in Tokyo were succumbing to
some kind irrational Oriental fatalism – an impression heightened by Tōjō Hideki’s
assertion on October 14 that ‘a man sometimes must dare to leap boldly from the
towering stage of Kiyomizu Temple’.80 Links have been drawn between the decision for
war against the United States and the samurai code, or a specifically Japanese ‘siege
mentality’, if not collective hysteria. Yet in many ways this way of thinking was more
Western than Eastern in its provenance. Unknowingly, Tōjō was echoing Bethmann
Hollweg’s arguments for a German war against Russia in 1914 and Hitler’s arguments
for a German war against the Western powers in 1939. Even the timeframe was similar:
75 Coox, ‘Pacific War’, p. 325; Fujiwara, ‘Role of the Japanese Army’, p. 191. 76 Kiyoshi, ‘Japanese Strategy’, pp. 129ff. 77 Ibid., p. 132; Barnhart, ‘Japanese Intelligence’, p. 449. 78 For more realistic assessments of Japan’s economic position, see Coox, ‘Pacific War’, pp. 333ff. 79 Jansen, Japan and China, pp. 404f. 80 Coox, ‘Effectiveness of the Japanese Military Establishment’, p. 14.
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Two years from now [1943] we will have no petroleum for military use; ships will
stop moving. When I think about the strengthening of American defences in the
south-western Pacific, the expansion of the U.S. fleet, the unfinished China
Incident, and so on, I see no end of difficulties. We can talk long about suffering
and austerity but can our people endure such a life for long? ... I fear that we
would become a third class nation after two or three years if we merely sat tight.81
Thus, when Tōjō spoke of ‘shutting one’s eyes and taking the plunge’ he was making a
very German argument: to gamble on immediate war rather than submit to relative
decline in the near future; to put to use military assets that would certainly bankrupt the
country if they continued to sit idle.82 In the words of a High Command policy paper
presented to the Imperial Conference of September 6, 1941, the American aim was ‘to
dominate the world’; to this end the United States aimed ‘to prevent our empire from
rising and developing in East Asia’. Japan was in ‘a desperate situation, where it must
resort to the ultimate step – war – to defend itself and ensure its preservation’. The
alternative was to ‘lie prostrate at the feet of the United States’.83
The Japanese were not fantasists. For Matsuoka Yōsuke, Pearl Harbor was the
disastrous culmination of a strategic miscalculation. He had assumed that the
combination of the Tripartite Pact with Germany and Italy and the Neutrality Treaty with
the Soviet Union would deter the United States from resisting Japanese expansion in
Asia.84 Nomura Kichisaburō, the last pre-war ambassador to Washington, had favored a
more moderate policy, seeking a return to the Open Door regime in China, rather than
risk war with the United States.85 Nor were all Japan’s senior naval officers persuaded by
Yamamoto’s plan. Nagano Osami, chief of the Navy Staff, argued that Japan was ‘bound
for self-destruction and … destined for national extinction’ – though he regarded this,
somewhat paradoxically, as true to ‘the spirit of defending the nation in a war’.86 In the
summer of 1941 the Economic Mobilization Bureau produced a report which concluded
that after two years of hostilities, Japan’s economic resources would probably not suffice
81 Coox, ‘Pacific War’, p. 336. 82 Buruma, Inventing Japan, p. 96. See also Jansen, Japan and China, pp. 405–8. 83 Coox, ‘Pacific War’, p. 329. 84 Lu, From the Marco Polo Bridge, p. 119. 85 Graebner, ‘Introduction’, p. xii. 86 Kimitada, ‘Japanese Images’, p. 119.
25
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to sustain air and naval operations. Nagano expected that ‘the situation [would] become
increasingly worse’ as early as the second half of 1942.87 Tōjō himself admitted that he
did not know what Japan would do if war continued after 1943.88 It was not hubris that
led to Pearl Harbor, but a conviction that it was preferable to take the chance of defeat in
war than ‘to be ground down without doing anything’.89
Perhaps the real fantasists were the Americans, who adopted a remarkably
confrontational stance in the final pre-war months, given the vulnerability of their own
military installations in the Pacific, particularly the Philippines. The British were
markedly more conciliatory, even temporarily closing the Burma Road between July and
October 1940 in response to Japanese pressure.90 For reasons that are not easy to fathom,
Roosevelt consistently exaggerated the future economic and strategic importance of
China and underestimated the perils of war with Japan.91 He declined an invitation from
Prince Konoe to attend a summit conference in the summer of 1941. Secretary of State
Cordell Hull wanted complete withdrawal of Japanese troops from China and Indo-
China; he would not hear of any suspension of U.S. aid to Chiang, which the Japanese
demanded. In his fateful note of November 26, Hull even proposed a mutual surrender of
extraterritorial rights in China – an end, in effect, to the old system of unequal treaties –
and recognition of the Kuomintang government.92 With some justification, the policy of
the United States towards Japan in this period has been likened to her policy towards the
Soviet Union during the Cold War, with the difference that the United States failed to
appreciate the very grave danger of a Japanese first strike.93
V
Could the Axis powers have won the Second World War? By the summer of 1942,
Hitler’s soldiers had reached the banks of the River Don, the gateway to the Caucasus,
and were pressing on towards the Volga. The Soviet oilfields at Maykop were captured;
87 Coox, ‘Effectiveness of the Japanese Military Establishment’, p. 13. 88 Coox, ‘Pacific War’, pp. 333ff. 89 Coox, ‘Effectiveness of the Japanese Military Establishment’, p. 14. 90 Lowe, Great Britain and the Origins of the Pacific War, pp. 284–7. Cf. Lowe, ‘Great Britain and the Coming of the Pacific War’, pp. 44ff. 91 Clayton, ‘American and Japanese Strategies’, pp. 709f. 92 Coox, ‘Pacific War’, p. 337. 93 Iriye, Power and Culture, p. 1.
26
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the swastika flew on the peak of Mount Elbruz. Poland, the Baltic states, the Ukraine and
Byelorussia: all were in German hands. By this stage in the war, Germany and her allies
controlled virtually all of Western and Central Europe too, with the exception of a
handful of neutral countries (Eire, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland and Spain). As one
Russian commentator put it, ‘Paris, Vienna, Prague and Brussels had become provincial
German cities.’94 The Balkans had yielded to German arms, as had Crete. In North Africa
it was very nearly the same story. On June 17, 1942, Rommel’s Afrika Korps captured
the British stronghold of Tobruk and thrust into Egypt to within fifty miles of Alexandria.
Intoxicated by victory, Hitler contemplated the future German conquest of Brazil, of
Central Africa, of New Guinea. The United States, too, would ultimately be ‘incorporated
… into the German World Empire’.95 Japan, meanwhile, had achieved no less
astonishing victories in Asia and the Pacific. Already by 1941 the greater part of Eastern
China was in Japanese hands. The six-month onslaught that began with Pearl Harbor
created a vast ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Zone’, embracing modern-day Malaysia,
Myanmar, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam, to say nothing of a huge arc of Pacific
islands. By the summer of 1942, then, as Richard Overy has observed, only an incurable
optimist could be certain that the Allies would win the war.96 ‘We have already lost a
large proportion of the British Empire,’ lamented Alan Brooke, Chief of the Imperial
General Staff, in [date]†, ‘and are on the high road to lose a great deal more of it.’ Britain
seemed to be ‘a ship … heading inevitably for the rocks.’97 ‘Would we able to save India
and Australia? … Egypt was threatened. … Russia could never hold, [the] Caucasus was
bound to be penetrated’. The Germans might even reach the Gulf oilfields (‘our Achilles
heel’).98
Military historians have long debated the strategic options open to Germany and
Japan, in search of alternative decisions that might have tipped the war Hitler’s and
Hirohito’s way. The difficulty with all the counterfactuals that have been proposed is that
virtually none of them suggests a way in which the Axis powers could have overcome the
overwhelming economic odds against them once they had taken on simultaneously the 94 Grossman, Life and Fate, p. 195. 95 Burleigh, ‘Nazi Europe’, pp. 341f. 96 Overy, Why the Allies Won, p. to come.† 97 Brooke, War Diaries, pp. 243f. 98 Ibid., p. 249, 280−3, 355
27
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British Empire, the United States and the Soviet Union. To be sure, the Blitzkrieg
campaigns of 1939−1942 narrowed the economic gap between the Axis powers and their
foes. The Germans very successfully sucked resources out of occupied Western Europe;
at their peak in 1943 unrequited transfers from France amounted to 8 per cent of German
gross national product – equivalent to a third of pre-war French national income.99
Germany all but monopolized the exports of the West European countries she occupied.
The former Czechoslovakia, too, was a substantial net contributor to the German war
effort.100 So deep did Operation Barbarossa and subsequent German offensives penetrate
that they captured a huge proportion – more than half – of Soviet industrial capacity.101
Moreover, the Germans were able to treat their empire as a bottomless reservoir of cheap
manpower. Foreign workers accounted for a fifth of the active civilian labor force by
1943.102 After being put in charge of German armaments production, Albert Speer
galvanized the Third Reich’s economy, almost trebling German weapons production
between 1941 and 1944 by imposing standardization on the manufacturers and achieving
startling improvements in productivity.103 The Japanese also performed feats of economic
mobilization, increasing aircraft production by a factor of five and a half between 1941
and 1944.104
Yet it was nowhere near enough. The Big Three Allies had vastly superior
material resources. In 1940, when Germany and Italy had faced Britain and France, the
latter combination’s total economic output had been roughly two thirds that of the other
side’s. The defeat of France and Poland lengthened the odds against Britain, but the
German invasion of the Soviet Union restored the economic balance. With the entry of
the United States into the war, the scales tipped the other way; indeed, they all but
toppled over. Combined Allied GDP was twice that of the principal Axis powers and
99 Milward, War, Economy and Society, p. 140, tables 21, 22. 100 Trade figures for Central and Eastern Europe in Kaser and Radice (eds.), Economic History of Eastern Europe, pp. 523−9. 101 To be precise, 71 per cent of the Soviet Union’s iron ore mines, two thirds of its aluminium, manganese and copper, 63 per cent of its coal mines, 57 per cent of its rolled steel production, 40 per cent of its electricity generating capacity and a third of its rail network: Overy, Why the Allies Won, p. 82; Burleigh, Third Reich, p. 498. 102 Noakes and Pridham (eds.), Nazism, vol. III, pp. 908ff. 103 Overy, Why the Allies Won, pp. 198f., 201−4, 242ff. Though see Budrass, Scherner and Streb, ‘Demystifying the German “Armament Miracle”’, which seeks to diminish Speer’s contribution. 104 Coox, to come.†
28
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their dependencies in 1942. It was roughly three times as large in 1943, and the ratio
continued to rise as the war went on, largely as a result of the rapid growth of the U.S.
economy (see figure 5). Between 1942 and 1944 American military spending was nearly
twice that of Germany and Japan combined.105 It is difficult to see how different strategic
decisions could have prevented this disastrous lengthening of the economic odds on an
Axis victory. So much of the increment in Allied production simply lay beyond the reach
of Axis arms, in the United States and beyond the Urals. Moreover, the additional
oilfields that might have come within Hitler’s reach had he fought the war differently
were still far too modest in their output significantly to have narrowed the petroleum gap
between the two sides.
Figure 5
Ratio of Allied to Axis GDP, with and without the United States, 1938--1945
0.00
0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
3.50
4.00
4.50
5.00
1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945
Allied/AxisAllies ex-USA/Axis
Source: Harrison, 'Overview', p. 10.
Note: This chart calculates the ratio of Allied to Axis combined gross domestic product. The bars to the
right not only remove U.S. GDP from the calculation, but also the value of American aid to the United
Kingdom and the Soviet Union.
105 Goldsmith, ‘Power of Victory’.
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Moreover, the Axis powers were fighting not only against the British, Russians
and Americans; they were fighting against the combined forces of the British, Russian
and American empires as well. The total numbers of men fielded by the various parts of
the British Empire were immense. All told, the United Kingdom itself mobilized just
under 6 million men and women. But an additional 5 million came from India, Canada,
Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.106 Victories like El Alamein and even more so
Imphal were victories for imperial forces as much as for British forces; the colonial
commitment to the Empire proved every bit as strong as in the First World War.107
Especially remarkable was the fact that more than two and a half million Indians
volunteered to serve in the British Indian Army during the war − more than sixty times
the number who fought for the Japanese. The rapid expansion of the Indian officer corps
provided a crucial source of loyalty – albeit loyalty that was conditional on post-war
independence.108 The Red Army was also much more than just a Russian army. In
January 1944 Russians accounted for 58 per cent of the 200 infantry divisions for which
records are available, but Ukrainians accounted for 22 per cent, an order of magnitude
more than fought on the German side, and a larger proportion than their share of the pre-
war Soviet population.109 Half the soldiers of the Soviet 62nd Army at Stalingrad were not
Russians.110 The American army, too, was ethnically diverse. Although they were
generally kept in segregated units, African Americans accounted for around 11 per cent
of total U.S. forces mobilized and fought in all the major campaigns from Operation
Torch onwards.111 Norman Mailer’s reconnaissance platoon in The Naked and the Dead
includes two Jews, a Pole, and Irishman, a Mexican and an Italian. Three of the six
servicemen who raised the Stars and Stripes on Iwo Jima were born outside the United
States.112 More than 20,000 Japanese-Americans served in the U.S. Army during the
106 Statistics in Ellis, World War II Data Handbook, pp. 227f. 107 See e.g. McKernan, All In!, pp. 37−48. 70 per cent of Slim’s 14th Army were Gurkha, African or Burmese. 108 Details in Prasad and Char, Expansion of the Armed Forces, appendix 13−16. See also Chenevix-Trench, Indian Army; Barkawi, ‘Combat Motivation in the Colonies’. 109 Alexiev and Wimbush, ‘Non-Russians in the Red Army’, pp. 432f., 441. Cf. Rakowska-Harmstone, ‘Brotherhood in Arms’; Gorter-Gronvik and Suprun, ‘Ethnic Minorities’. Central Asians and Caucasians were, however, under-represented. Indeed, more of them fought for the Germans. 110 Beevor, Stalingrad, p. 170. 111 Buckley, American Patriots, pp. 262−318; Hargrove, Buffalo Soldiers, pp. 3−5. 112 Davie, Refugees, p. 195. The total number of aliens in the Army and Navy was 125,880.
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war.113 The Germans, it is true, had made some efforts to mobilize other peoples in
occupied Europe, as had the Japanese, but these were dwarfed by what the Allies
achieved. Indeed, the abject failure of the Axis empires to win the loyalty of their new
subjects ensured that Allied forces were reinforced by a plethora of exile forces, partisan
bands and resistance organizations. Even excluding these auxiliaries, the combined armed
forces of the principal Allies were already just under 30 per cent larger than those of the
Axis in 1942. A year later the difference was more than 50 per cent. By the end of the
war, including also Free French and Polish forces, Yugoslav partisans and Rumanians
fighting on the Russian side, the Allies had more than twice as many men under arms.114
The best measure of the Allied advantage was in terms of military hardware,
however, since it was with capital rather than labor – with machinery rather than
manpower − that the Germans and the Japanese were ultimately to be defeated. In every
single category of weapon, the Axis powers fell steadily further behind with each passing
month. Between 1942 and 1944, the Allies out-produced the Axis in terms of machine
pistols by a factor of 16 to 1, in naval vessels, tanks and mortars by roughly 5 to 1, and in
rifles, machine guns, artillery and combat aircraft by roughly 3 to 1.115 Blitzkrieg had
been possible when the odds were just the other way round. Once both sides were
motorized – one of the defining characteristics of total war − the key to victory became
logistics, not heroics. The fourfold numerical superiority of British armor was one of the
keys to victory at El Alamein.116 The average ratio of Soviet to German armor at the
beginning of the offensives of 1944 and 1945 was just under 8.117 The ratio in terms of
combat aircraft on the Eastern Front rose from 3 in July 1943 to 10 by January 1945.118
Likewise, Allied dominance of the skies ensured the success of D-Day and the
guaranteed the ultimate defeat of the Germans in Western Europe. In the Pacific,
meanwhile, the United States simply swamped Japan with a tidal wave of mass-produced
armaments. American submarines reduced the Japanese merchant marine by three
113 Myer, Uprooted Americans, pp. 146−53. 114 Based on the various figures in Harrison (ed.), Economics of World War II. For the end of the war, see Ellis, World War II Data Handbook, pp. 227f. 115 Harrison, ‘Overview’, p. 17. 116 Ellis, World War II Data Handbook, pp. 228, 230. 117 Ibid., pp. 14, 230. 118 Ibid., p. 233.
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quarters, cutting off the supply of indispensable imports. American anti-aircraft guns shot
down Japanese planes faster than Japanese factories could build them. American
shipyards built and repaired battleships while Japan’s sat idle for want of materials.119 By
1944 the United States was producing 26 times as much high explosives as Japan.120 In
terms of tanks and trucks the Japanese were in the same second-class league as the
Italians. In terms of medical provision – an area where the Allies made major advances
during the war − they were in the nineteenth century.121 Again, it is impossible to
imagine any alternative Japanese strategy after Pearl Harbor that could have compensated
for this immense economic imbalance.122 In putting their faith in increasingly suicidal
tactics, Japanese commanders revealed themselves as (in Alvin Coox’s apt phrase)
‘medieval samurai warriors masquerading as practitioners of modern military science’.123
The Americans, by contrast, were the masters of overkill, whose first principle was:
‘always have on hand more of everything than you can ever conceivably need’.124
The share scale of American economic capabilities had been underestimated by
both the Japanese and the Germans. The Axis leaders deluded themselves into believing
that, with the Great Depression, the American economic model had disintegrated. Yet
American corporations led the world in the techniques of mass production and modern
management. Despite the sluggish growth of aggregate demand in the mid to late 1930s,
firms like General Motors had been taking major strides forward in efficiency, exploiting
those economies of scale that were unique to the huge American market. Exports to
Britain and the Soviet Union had given GM and its peers a foretaste of what was to come.
With the American entry into the war, they were inundated with government orders for
military hardware. In the First World War, the result had been a mess: production
bottlenecks, chronic waste and inflationary pressure. In 1942 the opposite happened. ‘The
real news,’ as Charles E. Wilson of General Motors put it, ‘is that our American methods
of production, our know-how about the business, could be applied to mass production of
all these war things … and that is the one factor that I think our Axis enemies
119 Nalty, ‘Sources of Victory’; Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, pp. 521f.; Coox, ‘Pacific War’, pp. 377f. 120 Coox, ‘Effectiveness of the Japanese Military Establishment’, p. 21. 121 Clayton, ‘American and Japanese Strategies’, p. 717. See in general Harrison, Medicine and Victory. 122 For a survey of the literature see Peattie, ‘Japanese Strategy’. 123 Coox, ‘Effectiveness of the Japanese Military Establishment’, p. 39. 124 Cozzens, Guard of Honor, p. 12. See also ibid., p. 161.
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overlooked.’125 Here, too, a compromise was involved. With astonishing speed the big
corporations converted themselves from the champions of a consumer society to the
servants of a command economy. As John Hancock and Bernard Baruch observed: ‘With
the coming of war a sort of totalitarianism is asserted. The government tells each business
what it is to contribute to the war program …’126
In macroeconomic terms the results were startling enough. By 1942 U.S. gross
national product was more than 60 per cent higher than it had been in 1938. By 1944 it
was more than double its pre-war level. Between 1940 and 1943, 5 million new jobs were
created.127 This was the result of an immense fiscal stimulus, which saw federal deficits
rise above 20 per cent of GNP, and an attendant surge in both private investment and
personal consumption.128 Though some raw materials did have to be rationed, the United
States was, as Wilson of GM put it, the first country to work out how to have both guns
and butter in wartime.129 Much of the credit for this success must go to the corporate
executives – the so-called ‘dollar-a-year men’ like Philip Reed of General Electric – who
gave their services effectively gratis to the government during the war, and facilitated the
remarkably smooth cooperation between the War Department and the big manufacturers,
hitherto staunch opponents of Roosevelt.130 Never before or since has the federal
government intervened on such a scale in American economic life, building and
sometimes also owning a vast number of new industrial facilities.131 Agencies like the
National Defense Advisory Commission, the Office of Production Management, the War
Production Board and the Office of War Mobilization transformed the regulatory
landscape.132 It was at the microeconomic level, however, that the output war was really
won. For the biggest wartime advances in mass production and management were made
in vast factories like Ford’s mile-long bomber assembly line at Willow Run, Boeing’s B-
125 ‘Looking Ahead’, Testimony of C. E. Wilson, President of General Motors Corporation, before the Special Committee of the United States Senate to Investigate the National Defense Program (Truman Committee), November 24, 1943, pp. 28f. 126 Nelson, Arsenal of Democracy, p. 393. 127 Vetter, U.S. Economy, p. 16. 128 Vernon, ‘World War II Fiscal Policies’. See also Rockoff, ‘United States’. 129 General Motors Corporation, Press conference by C. E. Wilson, President of General Motors, October 19, 1945 (New York, 1945), p. 3. 130 See in general Nelson, Arsenal of Democracy. Cf. McQuaid, Uneasy Partners, pp. 13f. On business opposition to the New Deal see Stromberg, ‘American Business and the Approach of War’. 131 Smith, Army and Economic Mobilization, pp. 477ff. 132 Koistinen, Arsenal of World War II.
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29 plant at Seattle or General Motors’ aero-engine factory at Allison. At peak Boeing
Seattle was churning out 16 B-17s a day and employing 40,000 men and women on
round-the-clock shifts.133 Never had ships been built so rapidly as the Liberty Ships,
2,700 of which slid down the slipways during the war years. It was at wartime General
Motors that Peter Drucker saw the birth of the modern ‘concept of the corporation’, with
its decentralized system of management. 134 And it was during the war that the American
military-industrial complex was born; over half of all prime government contracts went to
just 33 corporations.135 Boeing’s net wartime profits for the years 1941 to 1945 amounted
$27.6 million; in the preceding five years the company had lost nearly $3 million.136
General Motors Corporation employed half a million people and supplied one-tenth of all
American war production. Ford alone produced more military equipment during the war
than Italy.137 Small wonder some more cerebral soldiers felt they were risking their necks
not in a ‘real war … but … in a regulated business venture’.138 It was strange indeed that
the recovery of the American economy from the Depression should owe so much to the
business of flattening other peoples’ cities. Tokyo’s economic disaster was Seattle’s
economic boom.
Though much more reliant than the Western Allies on pitting men directly against
enemy fire, the Soviet Union also out-produced Germany in military hardware. From
March 1943 onwards, the Russians had consistently been able to field between twice and
three times as many tanks and self-propelled guns as the Germans. This was remarkable,
given the relative backwardness of th